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AP
Deal close on $700 billion financial bailout plan
Thursday September 25, 4:41 am ET 
By Julie Hirschfeld Davis, Associated Press Writer  
Compromise close on $700 billion bailout as Bush plans White House summit 
seeking quick deal 


WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Bush is bringing presidential candidates Barack 
Obama and John McCain into negotiations on a $700 billion rescue of Wall Street 
as Democrats and Republicans near agreement on a bailout plan with more 
protections for taxpayers and new help for distressed homeowners.
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Senior lawmakers and Bush administration officials have cleared away key 
obstacles to a deal on the unprecedented rescue, agreeing to include widely 
supported limits on pay packages for executives whose companies benefit.

They're still wrangling over major elements, including how to phase in the 
eye-popping cost -- a measure demanded by Democrats and some Republicans who 
want stronger congressional control over the bailout -- without spooking 
markets. A plan to let the government take an ownership stake in troubled 
companies as part of the rescue, rather than just buying bad debt, also was 
under intense negotiation.

A bipartisan meeting was set for Thursday to begin drafting a compromise, which 
top Democrats said they hoped could pass within days.

The core of the plan envisions the government buying up sour assets of shaky 
financial firms in a bid to keep them from going under and to stave off a 
potentially severe recession.

Bush acknowledged in a prime-time television address Wednesday night that the 
bailout would be a "tough vote" for lawmakers.

But he said failing to approve it would risk dire consequences for the economy 
and most Americans.

"Without immediate action by Congress, America could slip into a financial 
panic, and a distressing scenario would unfold," Bush said as he worked to 
resurrect the unpopular bailout package. "Our entire economy is in danger."

Bush's warning came soon after he invited Obama and McCain, one of whom will 
inherit the economic mess in four months, as well as key congressional leaders 
to a White House meeting Thursday to work on a compromise.

With the administration's original proposal considered dead in Congress, House 
leaders said they were making progress toward revised legislation that could be 
approved.

Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., who has led negotiations with Treasury Secretary 
Henry Paulson on the package, said that given the progress of the talks, the 
White House meeting was a distraction.

"We're going to have to interrupt a negotiating session tomorrow between the 
Democrats and Republicans on a bill where I think we are getting pretty close, 
and troop down to the White House for their photo op," said Frank, the House 
Financial Services Committee chairman. "I wish they'd checked with us."

Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke have been crisscrossing 
Capitol Hill in recent days, shuttling between public hearings on the proposal 
and private meetings with lawmakers, to sell the proposal.

Obama and McCain are calling for a bipartisan effort to deal with the crisis, 
little more than five weeks before national elections in which the economy has 
emerged as the dominant theme.

"The plan that has been submitted to Congress by the Bush administration is 
flawed, but the effort to protect the American economy must not fail," they 
said in a joint statement Wednesday night. "This is a time to rise above 
politics for the good of the country. We cannot risk an economic catastrophe."

Presidential politics intruded, nonetheless, when McCain said earlier Wednesday 
he intended to return to Washington and was asking Obama to agree to delay 
their first debate, scheduled for Friday, to deal with the meltdown.

Obama said the debate should go ahead.

Lawmakers in both parties have objected strenuously to the rescue plan over the 
past two days, Republicans complaining about federal intervention in private 
business and Democrats pressing to tack on more conditions and help for 
beleaguered homeowners.

But many in both parties said they were open to legislation, although on 
different terms than the White House has proposed.

Some partisan sticking points remain.

Democrats are pushing to allow bankruptcy judges to rewrite mortgages to ease 
the burden on consumers who are facing foreclosure -- a nonstarter for 
Republicans.

Democrats acknowledge privately that the provision will almost certainly be 
dropped in the interest of a bipartisan deal. Obama told reporters it's 
"probably something that we shouldn't try to do in this piece of legislation."

Democrats also want any potential proceeds the government reaps from the 
bailout to go to a fund designed to pay for housing for poor families. Many 
Republicans oppose the very existence of the fund, which they say is a backdoor 
means of funneling money to liberal political groups.

Democratic demands that Congress be given greater authority over the bailout 
and that the government be required to help homeowners renegotiate their 
mortgages so they have lower monthly payments already have been accepted in 
principle.

Under the bailout bill, which will let the government buy huge amounts of toxic 
mortgage-related assets, "we're now the biggest mortgage holder in town, and we 
can do serious foreclosure avoidance," Frank said.

White House: http://www.whitehouse.gov

House Financial Services Committee: http://financialservices.house.gov








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